The Labour leader wants to spend his way to better employment figures – but can he?
We have moved a long way from NEDS concentrating on the interests of shareholders and helping to take executive decisions.
Outers need to do much more to convince people that Britain can flourish as a more independent state.
Learn a lesson from the European Free Trade Association, which includes Iceland and Switzerland. Its only purpose is promoting trade, not integration.
We need a cultural transformation in banking, not just claw-backs.
Our shopping habits are changing. Punitive levies don’t change that fact – they’re just anti-business and anti-consumer.
Miliband and his party are loath to admit that the private sector is driving Britain’s economy forward. Instead, they want to hamper it with higher taxes.
The Chancellor’s critics have been proved wrong.
Well, at least that’s one thing they’ll be able to agree on.
If he wants Britain to stay in, he needs a programme which can both address concerns here and win support abroad.
We should defend it in the same way the Germans protect their car industry and the French their agriculture.
If some charities were acting in a way that was genuinely balanced, they would have been more vocal in criticising the last Labour Government.
It’s predators versus providers in the Labour leader’s world. Question is: who’s who?
By all means, politicians, cut red tape and prevent our exploitation – but please don’t do much more than that.